I' am in complete agreement with B. Batilsed who must
have had ps)hle pWers Slince his anlysls of "Ra ton.l. coin-
sided with atlae peruftly. Too often only the chron com. co
l ers arn.heard In eolumps such U this. so when a rebuttal
better is offered It Ip a welcome relief from the attacks of infan-
e and egotistical college dudes such as "Rational."
Coco Bollto is a problem which wont be solved by snlping
at the U.S. Government from behind the bulwarks of anonymous
letters. That type of attack has always been and always will
be the product of a weak mind a d a jellied bsakbone. If Ra-
tional was me Intellect he claims to be he would offer several
suggetIons to the houpip s management to better conditions for
ot only himself but for all the tenants.
Rational, huw many times have you looked about your a-I
partmept and wondered what you could do to improve your liv-j
n .g condlitonl? How many times have you stopped your car to
move a child's tricycle out of the gutter so that some other car
wouldn't hit It? And If your neighbor makes a little extra noise
once in awhile unknowingly, do you knockson his door and ask
] pestely to keep ther note level down o do you run es fast
S eatour. Anonymous legs carry you tO the housing office to
--'-A'kin? yotwself those questions I am sure that you 1
-wtD ftd some major discrepencles in your line of resoning and
am lid that the government can't be at fault eft Orly. The
ho wag il btlt by the government however it takes more than
.hat provide a home. It take a lot of cooperation between
SAndlordad d tenant and also between tenant and neighbor.
la doing lot ne ask one more question of you. Mr. Rational. b
Why don't yoe attempt to b6 an Intellect In practice at well
asn pper? If you do you'll find that you'll be safe at the
la there than out when you come slidb*g home on that

By VICOa kim
TOKYO Nieolai L
little genius who let
revolutia, once
munisam' road to
ire the -onet and
world falls.
e hit that road. VI
s thlt the Rusal
kiddIgg us at the
tly, they're lying
I They haven't m
my gesti in uthe
is till eir road
sp-and tey are oa
aijr* pouring saboti
I agents, millions
tons of propaganda I
ra nation to under
teal our Oriental al

rtalal, tdy don't w
don't ned it.
11 win without frin
A they're winning 1
y, but most demW,
mate the most power
atlon, the Sohyo.
to its national convey
ught I was at an ai
Communist rally.
pceal is the school
1 which won't cooper
nti-narcotics divisle
nmeqt by directing
to warn their pupi
of opium. Of course
rade brings the Sovie
governmentt in Pelp.
0 a year.
t listened tu the
erpart of J. Edgar
a Golchiro FuUi di
a's Public Seturty I
Bureau.
res hat .the
unlst Party has
ers and sympathy
a secret army undo
command, called th
Committee." Tli7s is
IA controlled und
has 450M fuU)tima
!panosa) "FBI' chi
Cabinet members h
istenco of this und
ounist army gives I
new Communist t
and good behavior.
Fujil warned the
that these new tac
aost dangerous. Alre
aunist underground h
1 in Infiltrating ceni
nt offices here. And
at of the Communis
jSoh a labor fedoer
ament workers in t
Iic bureaus.
re are a8 Communi
era in the vital Jul
lone Mr. Fu74 di
"That's few eoit
other offices."
means that the Cio
is In a position t
happening inside ti
dlicMid other ACT,
JkSW*-40*-uh ^ W edk^

made overniht. It itu aut When they spok of the Ant
retuily planned. And ce
he lead at t ie rally was tai etk-
the Japanese Commuisit hi-I ...
stoiasetr, IchnlSo Suzuki.L I -
is asu ood a place as a i S
t out d Co d s.m dow fro1 d introduced. At

eof qtr Army officers f t. .
the conquered Japaned e
enad t to subsidize t he
th J Communist labor lnons
i their orgtauerors and
d otlhd a wild r time of it p i

ter the war. At that ag ist
ithat lqbor basmy offer Inr-

the pownquerful ComJapanest
amch~e of to subsidize w
nter of Communis t labor lons
strep right sivs to

yns their us oranizer and
hv.nyhem i t on ethe Atis
dU. operations her. The
we ine toel tce officers a 7nd

to ephat lbow tat tbse ls
was lie oft by MosIW IIt
isante r of Com I ,IiV0 4 I

flaim what we'e traced.
sw ts dollars tore
Underground macehi I I

rhavehanv to eet onut. th we

most of the san nations -
l to the Party. The red tolll......
Ow.l be open.e'u
Lhat happened that the Sum-

ion Ioi

I i

Pie art

ies Rage

T~elf Co w

oef 'relw,-,. *
Coma. LantHoIwTo'

1 T s., ,

rnioeehl Ntnedae ete.

A PIZZA. FEAST

Imh eWy A
*'nv. mM '-ynsL.m

rfl GLA$CES

I. *

ae nu can wsw a to
ice at a few hundredeAirl
*onhelt.
cilals at the Institute polfied
a number of its uuuIal
'Irei:
Application amy and ia
is snealther expalfVe eq ulp
S-- -aIml&"- l'lae.aI

As 5 Segreg
JA SO MA i. Aug.' 4- (UP)
-Paul B. .Jobson, son of a late
hf t ,,a.n field
| -odiy ilWm Ormcial voto count for
S th MiI i governorship but
he wilthave to prove his strength
a a.. off Democratic primary.
tate Atty Gen. J. P. Coleman
S ahead of former Gov. Field-
!. diMF;W itt -in the contest for the
S spo O Johusoin ThIbe see-
S epd: to- be held Aug. ,.
The man who vins Democratic
S nolHdtlion then is assured of e-
-tun from 1.446 of MNIss-
alPi's' 1-,6 precincts gave John-
rB Dn3fI's vAtes, -Coleman, 74,554,
Wribtt 6,4S8, attorney Ross Bar-
et[L i3 -and Mrs. Mary Cain,
S Wight, erstwhile "Dixiecrat"
who ran for vice president in the
IMS blolt fromt he Democrats, fell
Inate second pla;e early today aft-
or pacing the field most of the
night and I ter Coleman passed
him in his bid for the runoff.
L* the rest of the and- 1
date, pace-setter Johnson had
v wed to upheld MissislDppl'
Hselre-arloe patten. despite the
1t" Supa.e, Court ruling
agalmt Mparato I asehlols.
But while the rest of the. field
pelld out plans for resisting in-

.1a eeg e
S vot because the bealets. weaould
helleged ea he t ends
j hyid ot et o rse the pria.
S te ^ "llie tre Mislshappi
bem te Party."
S Ot 1,328 population of the
* aIl-Nero communityy of Mound
Bayou,*de.ep In the cotton grow-
ping lita country, only 106 voted.
SBolivar County election officials
advised the Mound Bayou. voters
S' in advance that their ballots were
disqualified. "
. Chairman Tom Tubb of West
Point i* many counties went
along with the state committee
request to challenge all N egrol
"In Clay County they didn't e-
ven oaer, to vote, hbe said. "None
showed up at the polls.
"Nqgroes have pretty good
sensa,".he added, "and we should
not have any trouble, with them.
,.-. boMd't ta. any NIght-
rKingr feor 1s to
Mrs. Cal, fiery week news-
paper editor who ose challenged
the government to jail her, tor
man-payment of s o c I a I security
taxes, was the first candidate to
SBut fue outspoken editor declin-
$ to,'.tch 46T support to any-
ig. taes., bureaucracy and
eSdless wasd in government and :
reagientation wll continue no
matter which of the four men
win," she said.
Joigon, the apparent leader of
the field is a 3a-year-old attorney
making his third try for the lov-
e r once held by his ate
'lDqd ...

at','
I

~0

- ~&~s 'sQ'

..TI

E :- :-a
-47

V ."- -

IA-
, ,- *H.. .. '
ii' ..-

*'4-
3, .- .,* .

p\:,- ."
.-. *'-.,:-

.' ..

'bisqualif e In Adeance

lationists Cofntt Primary

Cool Air Nibbles At Edges

Of Stifling US Heat Wave

CRICAGO, Aug. 4 ( ) l-mde flying inspection trip
er air nibbled at the e4ges of the er stricken Sthwestern couatie
nation's stilling heat wave yester- to assess the danger.
day. bringing relief to millions. Sweltering c ens tried every-
But for most of the sweltering thing think of to beat
rsidenta- from the. Rockies east- the heat, and at Detroit and et-.
ward the hot spell continued un- mated 100,000. Jamed-parka dur-
abated and approached new rec- ing the night to sleep outdoors.
erds for duration. At St. Louis, Mayor Raymond
SCool sea breezes came to the Tucker proposed that the city's
rescue of New York City, chasing cops be outitted in r m u a
the mercury down into the Sa shorts and sports shirts.
from Tuesday's szzling high of At Raleigh, N.C., state employes
97.5 degrees. New Yorkers were loosed a barrage of demands for
promised a "comfortable" quight air conditioning in state offi e
and another cooler day tomor building after some workers on
row. upper floors fainted from the heat.
Boston and other East Coast It was generally cool in t he
sports also got relief, while show- Pacific Coast but hot in the in-
ers took the edge of the he a t terior. At Rid Bluff. Calif., it was
somewhat in the western. G u If above 100, but a two hour's drive
states. -. away at Eureka on the coast It
The only other relief was on.the was in the 0s0
extreme northern edge of the heat Cool, Calif., reported 100 de-
belt, where Cooler air moved into agrees.
the northern Rockies and north- The beat also melted bfe pro-
era plains. But *oreeasters said teet6e snow of the Konwakitan
the *t trot youl not.apove Ve0 11 of l easing t

grip t e n cause a recurret destructive
(or near y two weeks lin June 1054. mud flows of IM, I and 1928.
Chicago recorded its ninth oen-
secutivqe day of above-90 tempera-
lures, compared with the record ACCOMPLIUSMENT
of 11 straight days set n Ju ne
last year. GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (UP)
Milwaukee has had 15 dayr of A blind high school senior, who
above-0o weather, surpassing last also participated in swimming,
year's sever and approaching the wrestling rnd track, graduated
all-time, mark of 26 set in 1981. sixth In his class. Leonard J3.
Iowa's heat, which has caused at Suchanek, blind since birth, plans
least 36 deaths so far, was the to study law at Creighton Univer-
*orst since 1936. sity in Omaha. He did all his stu-
Searing sun and a lack of rain dying by tape recorder-books be-
were beginning to cripple the Io- ing read on the tape by t weo
wa corn crop and Gov. Leo oegh friends.

DOWN PAYMENT 12.00o
BALANCE MONTHLY
Powerful whisper quiet 2 spedd dual purpose fan changes all air in
5 to 6 rooms in minutes. Folding handle on top for easy carrying
from room to room. Use in kitchen, living or dining room in bed,
room window it night. Used with a room air conditioner, it circus.
lates-cooled air from room to room, helps cool two rooms at same
time.

6-K Romance Gossip
-.0o--
bNOO. &ug. 4 (UP) The tons. The princess was t of
0im ra.-of u.ton re- honor at the lavish party the
.d *puBL Capt. Peter Town- Earl gave -here recently.
It oceety goaalp as the AUl of them event. have.show-
iu ,andidate for Princess ed him ahead of Townsend in
Iar 't hand today, the gossip of royal romance, a
36-year-old arl Is a very subject atill tinged with uncer-
e badcelor., with b I u e tainty in Margaret's case.
id, a million in the bank and However, two big dates ar e
proper family background. cominR up in the princess life
Crtt the social season just this month which may go along
A the arl has been con- way toward clearing up her fu-
itl at Margaret's side. They ture.
9 been together at theaters. One ia her 25th birthday on
urfants and private func- Aug. 21. On. that day she wins
the right to wed without the
consent of her sister. Queen Eli-
zabeth II, provided she notifies
Parliament and then waits a
year before being married.
The other big date is the
aueen's very private house par-
ty at Balmoral Castle at the
SACO ON gRfgoE end of this month.
S. If the tall, blond Earl is in-
By OALD JACOBy cludect in the royal guest list
Written for NEA nerviee for the Balmoral function, ro-
mantei speculation will start in
earnest. It sl an accepted fact
In court circles that a prospec-
tive suitor for a princess' hand
NORTH I always joins the royal family
on holiday to see how he will be
VAT I $likely to fit In with the exclu-
*A72 asive little circle.
0 1082
A J 4 The Duke of Edinburgh, was
WSUT AST entertained in that way before
6 6104 hia engagement to Pimncef tl-
VXCQS1094 p85 zameth. He actual proposed to
*A q 4 7 5 her .in Balmoral C-atlI gardens.
4|6 4 KQ733 Since Townsend la a divorced
SOUTS (D) man with two children and con-
SAKQJ siderably older than Margaret,
vAAI It Is considered virtually Impos-
K* K 8sible Queen Elizabeth could
nan|4. .i ... ....... ...

^j L--------I
Mast bridge players would muff
t 8ody's hand. The temptation to
t fo-r an extra trick by taking
ses in both clubs and dia.
ds would be too strong for
their will power. As a result, they
d lose t vo clubs and two dia-
s, emerging with a score of
pa 100 instead of the game and
The correct line of play i. to take
finesses at all. You win the
at trick in dummy with the ace
hearts, draw three rounds of
trumps and then lead a low dia.

eat takes the queen of dia-
Ita.op either.the first or second
d of the suit and switches to a
thtougli dummy. You must
Slow from the dummy at this
-* ---_ -

.1 ..~.4

amncuu o a royal marriage in
view of the Church of England's
ban on the remarriage of di-
vorced persons.

Polle-SlMcken Girl

Insib On Skating
AKRON, 0. -(UP)- A seven.
year-old Akron girl has disc vered
her own therapy for crippling
polio.
Barbar Louise Etter walks om
crutches with a heavy brace on
her left but she diseajrdi the
walking aids and dons roller
skates twice a week.
The determined little girl was
an experienced skater before' she
w.as crippled with polio last July.
During long months of convales-
cence she reminded her mother
that she would be pack on skates
soo0.
Just after Barbara left the hos-
pital her mother, Mrs. J. J. Dahl,1
I o.* abo-ut her. da -

U Ku Ui wIMU W a UUal1UULr --* -
it East returns a heart (the nor-. Barbara thee started he to"g
al defense, and as good as any- Weeks of exercise with skates un-
nug else 1, you ruff and continue til she is now able to skate for
th the diamonds. West takes the half-hour periods twice a week,
* of diamond' and leads another and even do some tricks on
ib, but you must go right up sWaMes
h the ace o; clubs. Now you Weekly checks at the hospital
L to your Pand by ruffing a heart keeps nurses and doctors ip con
d lead whatever diamonds are stant surprise. One physician re-'
f, discarding the last club from ports that the child's weak foot
a dummy. muscles have been strenghtened
Ps you can see, this line of play to such a- degree that she may
e-youu time to discard one club eventually drop her crutches and
na the dummy regardless of the braces and walk normally.
hdoen of the missing 1igh cards He said Earbara's success with
diamonds and clubs. You will the- roller skating therapy might
rely lose two diamonds, but you provide equal success for other
I lose only one club trick., pollo-erippled children.

"I hate to dllRusion you, but she's just doing pundmiir
to a record" _.

NEW LOOK FOR A-IR FO -iII
for 1966. Three oicers in Wasln
of the recently approved summer un r issued
in '56. It includes a choice of shorts or long trousers, a deeVelese
shirt to be worn with or without necktie, 0 bush jket. The
pith helmet will be authorized for the tropics, ommanider will
designate combinations of this uniform to be wor In thek area.
Official U.S. Air Force photo,

NoYw -Ied N EW YORK JEWELERS ,ct
in frost of the CheM Ms.. 1I"J'75"
hans Bk, was establish- Sucears. to Burgeon's
gdii's 1904 and is one of the
sFIr: j ewlry sores in Paow-

STERLING CLUB PLAN
J^I" : ', "What is the New York Jeweler's sterling Therefore, you may WIN your ot for
Club Plan? You set aside the Sterling you the amount of a single week'i paymL
..ke, anday a small amount weekly.. At The weekly payment on Gootams ne
.d the samei te you select any number fom is a dollar per place setting. Oh, m a
,[double 0 to N9-and any week the number Fortune mile on you to t extent of-
ii* you selected is the same as the last two winning service for 12 persons wflth
digits of the first price of the Panama .about 00 for as little as uS. And If mI"
SLottery-yo get your silver Immediately don't wn? It will cost you n mre than
without asy further payment. U.S.A. list pried for O.Z. deUlvy.

.dyt -- in- matter of
e.ReinOzck Noodle Soup is
e eMdly Ppoplar. At .luch it's a de-
ligtful meal j itself... epe y loved
by children. At dinner, it naeus an appe-
tising pre to other good things to
come. TO0tm ttegt1 a gooply-the
mo 7e ton he more family

TraInd h Adkte
CAGO -(UP)-I- The story of
or War II housing construe-
ion for war workers and what
has happened to the huge projects
since i told in the journal of
housing, monthly magazine of the
National Association of Housing
and -Redevelopment Officials.
"iTe article traces the two-fold
effort to provide homes for the
tiouiands of families that migrat-
ed to man the war plants and
then, once Cie war was over, to
return to the normal hous-.
ingmarket.
Orgina there wee a-apet a
mill units built for war hous-.
jg. By the end of this year there
wi be only about 130, left toI
be dpos of, the Journal said.
Developments which housed war
workers during the war were oc-
ct.ied in the post-war years by
veterans, G.I. students and dis-
tister victim..
New towns which sprung up on
raw land furnished the most spec-
taiadar o4ents of the war housing
B Among theme was Van-
Ore, a town d 10oo
1h0i1%ls, for 40,(p, per.
-' hR'in a year and 1 days.
w as .dmei d by
-*1 1ad SUEe te-

19a h ,0
ie W51a tshle

ENMJ..?m I

LOURDES PHARMACY.

CASA ZALDO
cuml AmW. a
FARMACIA EL BATURRO
Me 5 ina.l.v Flea

Southbound

WUUllam Brown, assistant to A t
the director of the Health Bu- expec
rean and Carl J. Browne, auper- atu

scheduled to all from New for F
k today aboard the Panama are i
of. the Panama Line. Accompa- lame
od by their families, they are Maloi
returning to the isthnus after a The
vacation spent in the States. ger 1
Twenty-seven passengers are Harry
booked to sail from New York Altho
for Port-au-Prince, Haiti aboard Stella
the Panama. Brum

milaUatF for I
the ptme
*cha. No sign
studio at al.
If Howard He
R1O makes th
brary of films
-visiow thervr
tun. '*.-ff *

PTh*

i, a apj~ Un EARTH (Applnete). The Montana-
is ga.W 9rand1 ^ au thor who has trailed in
It -S rtune1 and written about mw countries.
movie,' "YWre took a linrst-hand at his own
ou L I United tates before wri Athll
Ly t, Loe warmly uman story of ,, oa
e"i. industry;
The book traees the biatoyf
t It matter, Dean l P PectlumnB fdk. anecdot
SJnSa 'lay n. wells (by man who wwere ooking
o Margaret 0'- for salt wter wells) to the future
gr ., romantle expect of the industry,
"4lory, Ir a&-Movie cludlng shore drilling
her mother hasn't "who Were so iound y t
beh -the-camer giant flares of natural ga"
of mama at the touched off at early wells "could
have been no more spellbound
-than we 'would be today if the
ighea recent sale of man ufact i products which n.
Studio's huge 11- tai e gredient- made from
.available to tele- natural gas suddenly were to shoots
1S. W big.ques -s ward from some hole in the
Ams ground an ..then come drn hinga
S 1028 _Ped As- down upon ua-the spectatosI
ch an unlikely occurrence Wod
.' ter us With everything rm
iWPo aIoes nadl hosiery to trnmanidnt

.Scout -News

A story-telling hour for chiden
at the Fort GUlck library, re
lyaided e eight GOlteou n aea
Ing the "Storyteller" pratlieley
badge.
The Hour was under the direc-
tion of Miss Virginia Flesher post
librarian, and Mrs. Harold Prey,
troop leader.
Children from three to eigh t
years of ago enjoyed the weekly
story recitals given by the Girl
Scouts. Miss Flesher and Mr s.
Prey instructed and guided tbhe
Scouts in conducting the Hour.
Miss Fleasher recently received
special notice in the Carribbean
Command when her entry in the
Third Annual Army-wide LIbra
Publicity contest reached the ft-
malI in Washington, D.C.)
The Girl Scouts, all members 1e
Intermediate troop No. 4 at Fort
Gulick, were awarded the profi-

"A Fine Film... A Gem!" -LIFE.
Coming next Wedpgday at the LUX Theatre,

There Is nothing new about mipor Hollywood players
Sleaping to stardom overnight but they are generally a
good deal prettier than Frneat Borgnlne.
Borgnine, the sadistic F iso of "From Here To Eternity"
plays the romantic lead In "Marty," United Artists screen
version of the celebrated tel vialon play by Paddy Chayef-
sky. A Hecht-Lancaster production directed by Delbert
Man, "Marty" opens next Wednesday at the CENTRAL
Theatre. "MARTY" i the tender and sympathetic love story
of a couple of simple, ungtlmorous people a butcher.
played by Borgnine, and a shy spinster schoolteacher, play-
ed by co-star Betsy Blair. .
Among the famous stars who made the leap from bit
role to stardom was thte John Garfield, who played a
total of eight minutes in "Four Daughters," back in 1938,
and aa.a result was strugL In his very next picture. Mari-
lyn Monroe was in "TheAsphalt Jungle" just about long
enough to wiggle her now-famous hips about one and t
halt timq#,.but that was enough. The rest, as any movie or
bueball -an can testify is history.
Audrey Hepburn played an infinitesimal role In "Young
Wives. Tale" -, buth r very next picture was "Roman Holi-
day," in which she o starred with Gregory Peck. Lana Tur-
ner showed up in a sweater In "They Won't Forget" for a
matter of.a couple of minutes before being murdered, but
nobod) forgot. Rita Hayworth did a brief, fiery dance in
S'Dante's Inferno," one of the "great all-time fl6ps, but her
next agnment was a starring role opposite James Ca -
ney In "Strawberry Blonde." Wendell Corey, Richard WI -
mark. Jimmy Stewart and Kird Douglas had very simUar
experiences.. Advt
-- -- -. ...-i__ ill___I__. i

style in the bohlo, the boh e wM
invaded and was atill Jumpin
the wee hours oa the mong.%u-
sic for dancing was furnaised by
Lougee's Serenaders.
Door prices were awarded as
follows:
Mrs. Katherine Trimble won a
piece of material; Mr. W. E. Gra-
dy .nd Mr. D. A. Waddel each
won a bottle of liquor. A set of
hand painted ash trays has not
been claimed.
The holder of ticket No. 362 Is
requested to call Mrs. David Kap-
lan, Tel. Coco Solo 340.
Those 'who enjoyed the affair
were especially grateful to Mr.
Stu Cougher, the chef, and his
assistants, Mr. Steve Crowell, Mr.
Sim Manr,. Mr. Wally Russon,
Mr. Rube Seidman, and Mr. R. 0.
Horne; also to Mrs. Cougher,
chairman of the affair, and her
assistants, Mrs. Anne M a n e r,
Mrs. Helen Crowell, and Mr s.
Thelma Louis, and to Mr. Dave
Kaplan for his part in making this
affair such a hugh success.

|..Along The Fairways
0
PANAMA WOMAN'S GOLF and Jack Schor donated a t
ASSOCIATION of House of Lords Scotch, w
wai very welcome.
/Mae skew made good her One of the gals found out
o.. inmis and made a clean sweep hard way why No. 5 'at Gai
S pt the PWGA Handicap Teurna-is called "Cardiae HJll"-took
meant held in July at B r a z o s 14 strokes to get to the top. A
Brooks. Mae tied With Cleo Burns solution prize was also awa
for medalist and wor the honor for tenacity and intestinal
in their play-off. She won h er tude to another golfer who g
athe without too much trou-ed 155. ( c e in with a

MANAGER OF VFW TEENEBS
"Mickey" Emnet; 0. ilernan, Is
managing the Veteran of For-
eign Wars Teener All Stars from
the Canal Zone.
As manager he will invade
Hershey, Pa., with bne purpose:
to capture the national cham-
pionship for the Canal Zone
group.
Kleinan has been the .klDner

s .tms havy been' In
championship playoffs.
IClernan first displayed his In
terest in local baseball in 194i
when he formed the famous Pe
dro Miguel team. This tean
composed of teenagers, defeated
some of the strong service team
on the Isthmus at that time.
When not devoting his time t
athletics, 'Kiemrnan is at the Mli
raflores locks, where he Is em.
played as a control hou&e opet
ator. He has been a resident o
the Canal zone for 16 years, no
lives in Ancon.
Kiernan hails from Jersey Cl
ty, NJ, Where he was we
known in that part of the Gar
den State for his athletic en
deavors.
Mickey says he is not going t
Hershey Just for the ride, he ex
pects to bring the atnation
championship to the Canal Zon
set by Rudolf Harbig of Germs
ny, July 15. 1930 at Milan, Italy
The Belgian runner won by on
yard over Audun Roysen of No
way, who also surpassed the ol
record. Boysen was timed in 1
4S.D.

s o -
to Origin of Breeds; Labrador merits of the black relreviag
By JOE STETSON dogs that were fo d in the Pole
Do g Editor region was the .secondlE'arl' of
i Malmesbury who made some. dl-
We have definite evidence that rect imports from -NewfoundludL
dogs of mastiff type were taken .Up until this time there wa
w by fishermen to the shores of more or less Indiscriminae cross-
Newfoundland during the 15th and ing with flat and-cualy dated re.
16th Centuries. There is reasona- trievers and even wit-setters or
ble likelihood that the Vikings other members "of he spaniel
lU may have left dogs during their family. With mon carefl bree'd-
.e.curs.ions along-the, eaten coast ing, type began to emerge and
I- of fai cohtinet. (Cea ,1000 A. iater,.wheM the.hi. Duke of,
D.).. These dogf i'ery naturally, MajiM buy gave three doga to
o interbred and iae with native the sixtlIuk ois D t euh; who :
K- dogs. established and mnlitaied as-q '
l certed breeding program,, t' .
b. There evolved from this admix- breed was ol-UIa way.,
ture such dogs as iud; by vir-
-. tue of their heavy oatss, survive Just before World War I tbe
y the rugged climate. Bome of Banchory Kennels destined to
e these -dogs were large and were contribute oateliaUy-to tIe eiod-
r- used by the natives for draft ur-era Labrador, was founded and
Id poses. They were at times bredhortly after the whr Lab
:. for their size and undoubtedly be- participated in field trials for the
came the forebears of our pres- frat time.
ent day Newfoundladds.
SThey were thn Hiht back -
Other somewhat smaller dogs. to this cotinet a he la
handier. for taki n small boats, 19S1 the first Lab trWal- waa'
but nevertheless hardy, web-foot- held. Here, under the spensrI.
ed and water lovin were used ship of sue sport peop
.by fishermen to aid retrieving Carlyle, Mrs. Mafl i I ,
Nets and line s and fish. Gerald .
There Is definite evideuc that soed until the .recelam
some of these dogs were brought their virtues n them.
to .Xpgland in the early 19th Cen- their preasntpolpuir*ity.
IAmong those recognizing the (Distributed by A ie) -

|YOUNG AT HEAt".
THE BEST ROMANTIC PICTURE, NOW AT THE
B CQ TEAL -THEATRE.

"Let the people know tie truth and the country o safe" Abeh'ouu Uiwln,

rmB IElAB

PANAMA, R. P., THUBDAT, ASUGUT 4, 63

. .. .-... S--.--- --L .--

- ra atu ua

eronist Chief

Defends

Is Means Of Averting

ft10io A sIBES, Aug. 4 (UP)
eronltParty leader
S t defended President
Mn .Peron's dictatorial acts
S means of averting ausas-
IOlandro Leloir, president of
' party's supreme council, said
io d to curb freedom to
out his revolutionary ob-
Svfal and to save himself
subvervlve coups.
Leloir'a speech, broadcast over
he Radio Belgrano network)
Sthe Peronul Party's reply
e opposition Radical Party.
Same at a moment when
country was beset by de-
itrations in protest against
o~ath of a Communist lead-
t police questioning
erring the June 16 revolt.
The Radical Party, in a radio

'7 .rout r

- -. -

address delivered by party chief as Jorge Emilio Coleotst nRa-
Arturo Frondizzi July 27, con- mon A. Corvera, flew a twin-
tended there could never be a engine Navy 0-47 plane into
political truce and internal peace nearby Carrasco airport I La
in Argentina until Peron gave night.
up his special powers. They asked for ay1lu0m for
Lelor, who recently succeeded themelvs, their wve a nn
Argentine vice-president ,Alber- their five children. .
to Talsaire as Peronist Party Informed sources said the of-
council president, vigorously de- ficers told Uruguayan authori-
fended the Peronist revolution's ties they took off from the Es-
achievements in 10 years, even pora airbase in the Corrientes
if "some revolutionary objec- province of Argentina.
ties required temporary restric-
tion of liberties." The sources said the officers
Maenwhile in Montevideo two reported that "nobody works
Argentine navy lieutenants said and normal activities are stop-
today they asked for political pod, affecting the econflic life
asylum in Uruguay because tbeir of the country." .
own country "is in a chaotic Buenos Aires, the Argentine
state with no guarantees of life capital, was the scene of a bloody
or property." but .short-lived revolt -led, by
The naval officers, identified Navy officers on June 16.

.. 4-.
'. ,,," I' ,-.. I. ,
^/.^...., '... -. .,

'^.w. ,^ *^ *f '. f"..--

GEAPLANE lB ACTION-4t Ian DIego, Qaif the XF2Y-I" Sea, Dart" Navy Jet fighter
i _a high-speed taxi run fter being re-fitted w a single ski as part of the Convair-Navy
ki fmde resarch program. The rvolutlonary plane, the first let seaplane ever built, has
5d'r d the speed of sound. .. .-

lo The Moon By Spaceship Before 2000 A.D.?

O.PNHAGEN, Denmark, Aug. be dae before the end of the cen by the United States in 1957 or
-Ameriman scientists y e tury." 1958. .
lay predicted that unmanned Meanwhile in Washin .ton the However, both the basketball-
:e ships wil reach the moon Air Force annound i. will try size satellite, also to be fired from
S.years and manned space to create artuficia mnoonlght in rockets, and the sodium vapor
Sby the end of this century. the skies over New Mexico this test are part of efforts to learn
merlean g u i d e d missile en- tall by releasing sodium v apo r more about the upper atmosphere
Mer Norman V. Peterson, of the from a rocket zooming 80 miles and outer space.
Gyroscope Co., of Great '-to the atmosphere. In this connection, Cmdr. Lewis
, .., said space ships will t. said the experiment to be Stecher. chief of naval ouLrations
sm the moon "within Ma years." conducted by the Air Research at White Sands Proving Grounds,
M said he meant unmanned and Development Comand, is d N. said that another rocket--
e ships, but he agreed with signed to learn definitely whether a Vl-will be launched about
jti Frederic.. Durant that thenI a l r o d m out SePt. 2. It, too will contains o-
u ships would be on the l Uo% 'i1"th S~rS.ntMM dium and trow off lght with a
by the end of the 20th Cen a similar test last November gave full moon at dusk."
t presidentt of th Inter "inconclusive results." Steeher said the September ex.
, Astronautical og nreIr The U. S. experiment was first neriment Is the third in a series
S rs t a Congress disclosed by a British scientist, to test the effects on rockets that
Sce a morning Prof. D. R. Bates, of Gueen's U-.re-enter the earth's atmosphere
n of the space group university, Belfast. from, outer space at high speeds.
etersen and Bell Aircraft engi- He said the podium would be in-
f'Hayward E. Canney, of But- He said the British are consider- clouded for tracking purposes on-
1 N. Y., will present a joint ing the sami. experiment and that ly.
or later today on "Uses and it may provide data about t he Prof. Bates said in London the
tieso of artificial satellite ve- winds, temperature and chemical upper atmosphere Is believed to
6I." reactions of the upper air. contain a relatively small amount
want said he could not exclude The experiment should produce of sodium which produces much
possibility of man landing on a ball of light equal to a full of the light in the air.
moon before the year 2,000. mooa at twilight, visible about 100 By increasing the amount of so-
' he said there is "a long way miles east of the rocket launching dlum in a small area, the lght
travel ye t and this is nottrav- site at Holloman Air Force Base, would be intensifed and the "full
I'overnight." N.M., scientists said. moon" effect created.
legisa was emphatic: "No The Air Force research center
Sunmanned space ships will at Cambridge, Mass., said the
* it moon within 20 years," rocket would be fired the week of
newspaper correspondents. Oct. 14. "
-frxt stage will be to send It said the experiment had noth-.
s1 pace ships to the moon,"I ing to do with the planned launch-
de "It is possible this will ng of an artificidal earth satellite

PRICES: .75 & .40
- TODAY -m
4:35 C :40 9:00 p.m.

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For Christ 3ab

Go To Russia

80

Highlight of
At whinh M5*1.

USAJ

cated
an =ans ee
n week
Gea. Lionel a..

Mccarr, commai amer
zNEW Aug. 4 (UP) U.S. Army Cari.bbean p Inted
Evanuget AlLy Graham return- 80 Department of the Am ft -
ed from a tive-month tour of gestion Awards to UA l
Europe y yesterday and said he civilian employes and ltary
wu workingn on the posslbillty personnel, was the awardMlg of
of arng h Crusade for the Meritorious Civilian service
Chriostto'lBu --a. Award to Lenworth N, JW .
Grahf0m M id he had discussed The award is the hdgfhe. an
the nosb last week in Lon- overseas'commander cI use a
dOBjj iian ~clergymen at- civilian employs.
tending thO Baptist World AU111-
ance Conventlon. He said he Pste a resident of Panta Cl-
could not say more at present ty, and an employee of the'BuAR-
about the project, I CARIB Quartermaster tion,
Corozal, was cited or tfltorl
A number of American clergy-
men have visited Rusta since
World War n as members of cul-AdjutanI Geeral,
tural groups but none Adufa l eneral,
preached there.
SThe evangelist said .the re- USAR(a b, Ne ds
sponse to 4 crusade in Europe
. e esmated 4 m-FIngerpt l Clerk
sons attended his services. which
drew more than 100000 at one The Adjutant General UAR-
sittng in London, Glasgow and CARIB ouncedtoda that a

He added that his visits to of f print clerk.
Sweden and Denmark arouse person applying for the n
hardlyy any enthusiasm." Ht ul t haveatehast
said he found morals in Scandl- rearslof aee of
navia "eceptionally low-- r- e .-n
tinularly sexual linmoralty,." ri t a
Grahaim sad church attend- ie
a am s r.ana-llutmeo low in otc
Denmark, where only per cnt
of the population attend church sIlity In l
and in Sweden, where 4 or 6 per tchn based on thorough
cent attends. knowledge of techniques and
Scon described n es of the Henry system
In contrast he described en- a t Pe FBI extension system
thustastic welcome In: of classifcation. Involving skill
FRANCEr "I found the great- in all general phases of fnger-
est spiritual hunger in my tri print fiction.
He Said that although 3 pn W should be submit
per in Rance never go, to my
church his ari services ver- t heivila Perdnnel Of-
.aged 1M'. attendance and Mi n USARCARXD, building No.
to 600 converts. He described the 23, PoSt Of Corosal, C.Z.
Catholic Church In France as
'ERMANY: "Church supportiEx-Luftw ff Pilot
has doubled what it was a year- .I.
ago." seeking 22 Allies
SWTZERLAND: "I found a
great response there."
SHBRITAIN: "Response to mye Helped In War
crusade was doubled there this
year and the newspapers were FRtANKFeURT, Aug. 4-(UP)-
friendlier." A 34-year-old former Luftwaffe
officer gravely 1ll with -rcancer
He said communion is "defin- has appealed to the US. State
Itely losing ground" in every Department to help him find 22
country he vslited. allied soldiers he helped escape

In Toronto, Ont., Sept. 18. He said aein Wilhelm Uhrer hopes
he wask considering a crusade In that the men he saved will come
New York City later this year. to his aid by arranging for his
He will begin appearance on treatment with radioactive Iso-
British commercial television topes available only in the Unit-
Sept. 25. Cd States.
lDoct at the Frankfurt Uni-
vrsity Cln -describe hie oon-
ditian oas "ry seritou" I
Uhrrso sa he lost the names
and addresses ,of the mob he
helped escape from ItalyIn 193
In the turmoil of war. D h o.Is
confident they will come to his
aid If they see his poiture and
hear his story.
The former pilot wants to be
treated with betatron rays, un-
available outside the U.S. Doc-
tors here say such treatment
may help him, but he could be
saved by a throat operation
which he refuses because he
would no longer be able to fly.